Timothy Leary, 'The Most Dangerous Man in America'
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DOW JONES, A NEWS CORP COMPANY DJIA 27902.95 0.26% ▼ S&P 500 3375.17 0.15% ▼ Nasdaq 11055.46 0.39% ▲ U.S. 10 Yr -12/32 Yield 0.715% ▼ Crude Oil 42.36 0.73% ▼ Euro 1.1803 0.14% ▲ The Wall Street Journal John Kosner English Edition Print Edition Video Podcasts Latest Headlines Home World U.S. Politics Economy Business Tech Markets Opinion Life & Arts Real Estate WSJ. Magazine Search BOOKS | BOOKSHELF SHARE FACEBOOKReview: Timothy Leary, ‘The Most Dangerous Man in America’ TWITTERThe LSD apostle’s escape from jail took him to Afghanistan, Algeria, Switzerland—and back to a cell in California, next to Charles Manson’s. Edward Kosner reviews ‘The Most Dangerous Man in America’ by Bill Minutaglio and Steven L. Davis. EMAIL PERMALINK Timothy Leary at a press conference in 1968. PHOTO: BETTMANN ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES By Edward Kosner Updated Jan. 18, 2018 7:12 pm ET SAVE PRINT TEXT 60 It’s fashionable these days to proclaim the Trump era the weirdest interlude in modern American history. But it’s almost an Augustan Age compared with the first few years of Richard Nixon’s presidency. For those too old or too young to recall that period in the early 1970s, nearly a half-century ago, here’s a cheat-sheet: Nixon was carpet-bombing Hanoi, secretly invading Cambodia, covertly recording White House conversations, compiling a list of enemies (including Sen. Ted Kennedy, Barbra Streisand and Jets quarterback Joe Namath) and masterminding the Watergate break-in and coverup. The radical Weathermen were blowing up banks, Army recruiting stations and a toilet in the U.S. Capitol. The thuggishly photogenic Black Panthers were ambushing white cops and running day-care centers, and a former Harvard psychology professor named Timothy Leary, the apostle of LSD, was being hunted by Nixon, who called him “the most dangerous man in America.” RECOMMENDED VIDEOS Leary is one of those oddball Americans who enjoy their evanescent moments of fame and Samsung Galaxy Note 1. 20: This Pandemic then linger on in memory as prophet or charlatan. But in his time, Leary was a stoned icon Sure Changed to artists and poets, hippie trippers, sybaritic socialites and revolutionary bomb-throwers. Smartphone Marketing “Turn on, tune in, drop out,” was his mantra, and he drove Nixon crazy. Already plotting his re-election as a law-and-order crusader, the president craved Leary’s scalp. This 30-Ton Robot 2. Could Help Scientists Produce the Crops of This was a problem, because in 1970, Leary, sentenced to 10 years after cops found two the Future marijuana butts in his car ashtray, had escaped from a minimum-security compound in What Kamala Harris California by shinnying along a cable. The saga of his fugitive odyssey and the 3. Brings to Biden’s government’s desperate manhunt is told in “The Most Dangerous Man in America,” by Bill Ticket Minutaglio and Steven L. Davis. It’s a rollicking tale that brings to life the antic atmosphere Why the U.S. Trip to of America in the “Me Decade.” 4. Taiwan Bothers Beijing A rich band of hippie drug smugglers called the Coronavirus Pandemic Brotherhood of Eternal Love allied with the 5. Fuels China’s Self- Weathermen to hustle Leary and his wife, Driving Cars Rosemary, in disguise to Algiers, where fugitive Eldridge Cleaver and a Black Panther posse had been ensconced in an elegant “embassy.” It was WSJ MEMBER MESSAGE the beginning of a 28-month adventure that WSJ Jobs summit: Job took Leary to Vienna, Swiss ski resorts, Beirut Seekers Anonymous and, finally, Afghanistan, where he was Hear from a career coach and a therapist on cornered and bundled onto a flight back to how to emotionally and mentally navigate California. the job search, plus submit your own questions. “The Most Dangerous Man in America” is RSVP written in the present tense like a thriller. Scenes inside solitary-confinement cells, squalid dope and love nests, and the Black Panther “embassy” are described in pointillist detail: “He steps out of the car, but Rosemary PHOTO: WSJ refuses to join him as he darts through the rain toward the embassy. She is smoking, looking THE MOST DANGEROUS MAN IN AMERICA very worried, and the weather is adding to her gloom.” Readers may wonder how the writers By Bill Minutaglio and Steven L. Davis Twelve, 384 pages, $30 managed to reconstruct these 45-year-old episodes, especially since their protagonist was tripping nonstop. In an authors’ note, Messrs. Minutaglio and Davis assure readers that every scene, thought and conversation in the book is based on exhaustive research, though they provide no footnotes to show what came from where. One of their earlier books won a PEN nonfiction research prize, so we’ll have to take their word for it. Leary had proclaimed a Declaration of Revolution (“Listen, comrades: The liberation war has just begun . .”) to get the radicals to help him escape America. But he and the Panthers were a mismatch from the start, although they shared an appreciation of the hashish always on offer at the embassy. Leary generally played the obsequious stooge to Cleaver’s macho revolutionary, absorbing diatribes from the author of “Soul on Ice,” the only man to appear at the same time on America’s best-seller lists and on the FBI’s most-wanted list. But Cleaver finally lost patience and had the Learys locked into dingy hotel rooms, fugitive prisoners of the fugitives. Leary was able to escape to Switzerland, where he came under the wing of a mysterious character rumored to be a fabulously rich arms merchant. Leary and his new British girlfriend lived luxuriously in Lausanne, went to a party with Andy Warhol in St. Moritz, and met the inventor of LSD, who chastised him for touting it to the young. They became chums anyway. Leary managed to write a book that the arms dealer peddled to a publisher for $250,000. He barely got to enjoy any of the money before he went back to prison, where his next-door cellmate was Charles Manson. It’s hard to find anything to admire about Leary. The man who urged the murder of Nixon and bragged that he’d done “more than anyone else in history to destroy the minds of a lot of white middle-class kids” pleaded LSD derangement at his trial. Convicted, he turned fink and testified against all his old comrades. In prison, his IQ tested at 143, with no sign of degeneration from all those drugs. Later, he entered the witness-protection program, wrote books, had cameos in movies, became a talk-show fixture and lectured to standing ovations. He died at 75 of prostate cancer in 1996, and 7 grams of his ashes were, appropriately enough, rocketed into space. Cleaver also shared a prison with Leary, became a born-again Christian, converted to Mormonism and turned into a conservative Republican. He was arrested for burglary and twice for cocaine possession before he died at 62 in 1998. After his pardon by Gerald Ford, Richard Nixon spent 20 years trying to rehabilitate his reputation. He wrote nine books and offered his wisdom about world affairs to anyone who would listen, before his death at 81 in 1994. It’s a toss-up whether Leary or Nixon was the more dangerous man in America in their time, but they plainly deserved each other. Mr. Kosner was the editor of Newsweek, New York, Esquire and the New York Daily News. Appeared in the January 19, 2018, print edition as 'Hunting The Acid Man.' SHOW CONVERSATION (60) JOIN THE CONVERSATION White House Says Most SPONSORED OFFERS Coronavirus Job Losses Likely to Be Temporary WALMART: KOHL'S: EXPEDIA: Walmart coupon: $10 off all 20% off your entire order with Expedia promo: 50% off fully- Israel, U.A.E. Agree to departments Kohl's coupon refundable hotel bookings Establish Formal Diplomatic Ties EBAY: HOME DEPOT: TARGET: A Deadly Coronavirus Was Up to 15% off branded 10% off furniture using Home $15 gift card with Spectra Inevitable. 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